To make things even worse, a considerable number of voters couldn’t find ballots to vote for candidates that weren’t related to First Lady Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. Voters asked for ballots to the pertinent voting venue’s manager and in many cases, the answer was to just simply vote for somebody else. Another thing to take into account is that all voting venues were supposed to close at 6 p.m., but due to the opening delay in some locations, a one-hour extension for voting was announced while media channels began announcing, in parallel, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner’s victory.
First Lady Cristina Fernández de Kirchner won the elections for president in Argentina with 44.9 percent of the votes, followed by Elisa Carrió and her Civic Coalition with 23 percent of the votes, while former economy minister Roberto Lavagna reached the third place with 17 percent of the votes. Current Vice-President, Daniel Scioli won an incredible 52 percent of the vote for governor of Buenos Aires, while anti-crime fighter Juan Carlos Blumberg, (his son, Axel Blumberg, was abducted and killed in March of 2004), secured less than one percent of the vote for governor of Buenos Aires.
The President-elect Cristina Fernandez and her husband, current President Néstor Kirchner, along with the Vice-president elect Julio Cobos (Mendoza governor) and Daniel Scioli celebrated the victory at the Olivos Presidential residence. Among the group of winners there was a special visitor: Ségolène Royal, France’s defeated presidential candidate who was visiting Argentina as a guest of President-elect Cristina Fernandez.
Although Cristina Fernandez has been compared to the legendary First Lady of Argentina Eva Duarte de Perón as well as to former First Lady of the United States Hillary Clinton, who is also seeking to become the first elected female president of the United States, Mrs.



